Fake Dating My Rich Nemesis — Part 2 / Season 2 Status
People say “Part 2” a lot for this mini-series. Most of the time they mean “the second chunk of episodes” (not a new season). This page keeps it simple: what’s real, what’s rumor, and what to do if you can’t find the later episodes.
Quick answer: is “Part 2” a real Season 2?
Most likely: “Part 2” = later episodes
For this title, “Part 2” usually means the second chunk of episodes (the ending run). Many episode pages are split into two ranges: 1–50 and 51–62. So people talk like it’s “Part 1” and “Part 2,” even though it’s still one mini-series.
If you heard “Part 2 is out,” it often means the person finally found EP 51+ (not that a new season was released).
Not confirmed: a new season / sequel
A real Season 2 normally shows up as a clear new listing, official promo wording (“Season 2”), or a separate episode guide that starts again from EP 1. As of the last check date at the top of this page, there’s no clean public sign of that.
What “Part 2” usually means for this series
The split creates the nickname
Fans use “Part 2” because it’s an easy label. If you watched EP 1–50 somewhere and then you can’t find the rest, it feels like the story “stops,” even though it doesn’t. The last arc (the ending stretch) lives in the second range.
This is also why the ending page on this site is built like a “moment finder.” People don’t always know their exact episode number, but they remember a scene vibe. That gets them back on track fast.
Clip culture makes it worse
On short-video platforms, “part 2” is often just the uploader’s next clip. It doesn’t mean an official continuation. It can also mean: “this is the second half of my compilation.”
So you get two different “Part 2” meanings floating around at the same time: (1) the official-ish episode range split, and (2) random clip labeling. That’s where most confusion comes from.
If you’re missing “Part 2”: what to do (without losing your mind)
Step 1: confirm you’re actually looking for EP 51+
Most “Part 2” hunts are really “I can’t find the ending chunk.” If your last scenes were heavy fighting, public embarrassment, or a big secret leak, you’re probably near the end of EP 1–50. The next step is the “final run” range.
If you’re not sure, use the homepage Episode Finder first (it’s built for “where am I?” problems). Then use the ending page when you’re sure you’re in the finale arc.
Step 2: use “scene markers,” not exact numbers
With mini-series mirrors, episode numbers can be off by a few because of re-uploads, “full movie” edits, or duplicated clips. The safest method is to match by scene type: aftermath distance → chase/gesture → truth goes public → boundary line → trust lands → wrap-up calm.
Rumor vs proof (the table I wish existed everywhere)
| What you’ll see online | What it usually means | How to verify fast |
|---|---|---|
| “Part 2 is out” | They found the second episode chunk (EP 51–62) | Look for “51–62” style navigation and jump to the ending arc |
| “Season 2 confirmed” | Fan hype or clickbait | Needs official promo wording or a new separate listing |
| “There are 64 episodes” | A variant listing or a different catalog entry | Not proof of a new season by itself |
| “Part 2 is a new story” | They mixed up “ending chunk” with “new season” | A real new season would restart at EP 1 with new arc setup |
How to spot real Part 2 news (not rumor)
Real signals
If a real sequel is happening, you usually get at least one clear signal: a separate official listing, official promo that literally says “Season 2,” or a fresh episode guide that starts again from the beginning.
Another strong sign is a new “setup” arc that feels like EP 1 again: new conflict, new stakes, and new “why are we here?” Endings don’t do that. New seasons do.
Fake signals (common traps)
“Confirmed” with no link. A random date in a comment. A TikTok caption saying “S2 soon.” Or an upload titled “part 2” that is just the next clip.
Even an episode-count mismatch alone is not enough. Sometimes catalogs list different totals for boring reasons: duplicated IDs, a “full movie” cut, or re-uploads treated as episodes.
If a real sequel ever happens: what it would need to be (story-wise)
It would need a new main problem
The first story is built on a fake-dating deal, enemy chemistry, and the pressure of ex drama. A true continuation can’t just repeat “fake date again” in the same way, or it feels like a loop.
A sequel would usually shift the battle to a new place: family expectations, reputation pressure, long distance, a serious trust test, or a public relationship problem that can’t be solved with flirting.
It would need a new hook (or a new “pretend”)
If the writers keep a “pretend” hook, it usually changes shape: fake engagement, a contract relationship, a public PR move, or something that forces them to act united when they’re emotionally messy.
Updates box
Last checked: Jan 15, 2026
Current baseline: Public catalogs commonly show a single mini-series with 62 episodes,
plus a split selector 1–50 and 51–62 (the usual “Part 2” meaning).
If you see “Season 2 confirmed,” look for something concrete: a new listing, official promo wording, or a new episode guide. Without that, assume it’s either (a) a clip label, or (b) people talking about the later episode chunk.
